Drewy99 t1_ja8u7jp wrote
Reply to comment by OregonTripleBeam in A cougar was observed swimming 1.1 km (0.68 miles) to an uninhabited island in Pugent Sound. Researchers find other records implying mountain lions can swim even farther to hop between islands, likely >2 km. “We are redefining the mountain lion in our minds as an animal that can swim.” by TR_54
Or camping on a deserted island and waking up to mountain lion neighbors
historical_regret2 t1_jaau8of wrote
It’s this way on the coast of BC. Very dense cougar territory. If you’re kayaking through and you know there’s a cougar around, it can be a bit spooky. I’ve spent some nights on some small islands where I’ve faced the trees, rather than the beach, while sitting at the campfire. Just didn’t want to turn my back on the woods. You know they’re there.
Frosti11icus t1_jabfvfd wrote
There's Sea Wolves on the BC Coast in addition to bears, so it's pretty well established that Apex predators not only can swim, but it appears is necessary in order to survive on the BC coast. I'm not knocking science here because I understand this is how the process works, but it's surprising that anyone would assume Cougars don't swim...
fucking_blizzard t1_jac6xny wrote
>I’ve spent some nights on some small islands where I’ve faced the trees, rather than the beach
Meanwhile, the aquatic cougars creep their way onto the sand....
bit1101 t1_jacb129 wrote
And the sky cougars fly in from above.
KiIgore-Trout t1_jacpdjy wrote
Science just confirming long held beliefs about cougar naval and air force dominance
[deleted] t1_jadlihp wrote
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[deleted] t1_jaf3zi4 wrote
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HaikuBotStalksMe t1_jabjcq6 wrote
Or waking up in your apartment and there's a mountain lion?
madeformarch t1_jacd9dp wrote
No, that's a cougar
HaikuBotStalksMe t1_jacgrj1 wrote
I mean, if it's a pretty cougar, it's a win.
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